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Langmuir monolayers composed of single and double tail sulfobetaine lipids

Hazell, Gavin ; Gee, Anthony P. ; Arnold, Thomas ; Edler, Karen J. LU orcid and Lewis, Simon E. (2016) In Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 474. p.190-198
Abstract

Hypothesis: Owing to structural similarities between sulfobetaine lipids and phospholipids it should be possible to form stable Langmuir monolayers from long tail sulfobetaines. By modification of the density of lipid tail group (number of carbon chains) it should also be possible to modulate the two-dimensional phase behaviour of these lipids and thereby compare with that of equivalent phospholipids. Potentially this could enable the use of such lipids for the wide array of applications that currently use phospholipids. The benefit of using sulfobetaine lipids is that they can be synthesised by a one-step reaction from cheap and readily available starting materials and will degrade via different pathways than natural lipids. The... (More)

Hypothesis: Owing to structural similarities between sulfobetaine lipids and phospholipids it should be possible to form stable Langmuir monolayers from long tail sulfobetaines. By modification of the density of lipid tail group (number of carbon chains) it should also be possible to modulate the two-dimensional phase behaviour of these lipids and thereby compare with that of equivalent phospholipids. Potentially this could enable the use of such lipids for the wide array of applications that currently use phospholipids. The benefit of using sulfobetaine lipids is that they can be synthesised by a one-step reaction from cheap and readily available starting materials and will degrade via different pathways than natural lipids. The molecular architecture of the lipid can be easily modified allowing the design of lipids for specific purposes. In addition the reversal of the charge within the sulfobetaine head group relative to the charge orientation in phospholipids may modify behaviour and thereby allow for novel uses of these surfactants. Experiments: Stable Langmuir monolayers were formed composed of single and double tailed sulfobetaine lipids. Surface pressure-area isotherm, Brewster Angle Microscopy and X-ray and neutron reflectometry measurements were conducted to measure the two-dimensional phase behaviour and out-of-plane structure of the monolayers as a function of molecular area. Findings: Sulfobetaine lipids are able to form stable Langmuir monolayers with two dimensional phase behaviour analogous to that seen for the well-studied phospholipids. Changing the number of carbon tail groups on the lipid from one to two promotes the existence of a liquid condensed phase due to increased Van der Waals interactions between the tail groups. Thus the structure of the monolayers appears to be defined by the relative sizes of the head and tail groups in a predictable way. However, the presence of sub-phase ions has little effect on the monolayer structure, behaviour that is surprisingly different to that seen for phospholipids.

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author
; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
keywords
Air-water interface, Langmuir monolayers, Lipids, Reflectometry, Sulfobetaine
in
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science
volume
474
pages
9 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:84964318878
  • pmid:27124813
ISSN
0021-9797
DOI
10.1016/j.jcis.2016.04.020
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2016.
id
7073ee8d-3674-410d-babe-4ccec34562a5
date added to LUP
2023-03-29 11:44:06
date last changed
2024-05-02 20:42:55
@article{7073ee8d-3674-410d-babe-4ccec34562a5,
  abstract     = {{<p>Hypothesis: Owing to structural similarities between sulfobetaine lipids and phospholipids it should be possible to form stable Langmuir monolayers from long tail sulfobetaines. By modification of the density of lipid tail group (number of carbon chains) it should also be possible to modulate the two-dimensional phase behaviour of these lipids and thereby compare with that of equivalent phospholipids. Potentially this could enable the use of such lipids for the wide array of applications that currently use phospholipids. The benefit of using sulfobetaine lipids is that they can be synthesised by a one-step reaction from cheap and readily available starting materials and will degrade via different pathways than natural lipids. The molecular architecture of the lipid can be easily modified allowing the design of lipids for specific purposes. In addition the reversal of the charge within the sulfobetaine head group relative to the charge orientation in phospholipids may modify behaviour and thereby allow for novel uses of these surfactants. Experiments: Stable Langmuir monolayers were formed composed of single and double tailed sulfobetaine lipids. Surface pressure-area isotherm, Brewster Angle Microscopy and X-ray and neutron reflectometry measurements were conducted to measure the two-dimensional phase behaviour and out-of-plane structure of the monolayers as a function of molecular area. Findings: Sulfobetaine lipids are able to form stable Langmuir monolayers with two dimensional phase behaviour analogous to that seen for the well-studied phospholipids. Changing the number of carbon tail groups on the lipid from one to two promotes the existence of a liquid condensed phase due to increased Van der Waals interactions between the tail groups. Thus the structure of the monolayers appears to be defined by the relative sizes of the head and tail groups in a predictable way. However, the presence of sub-phase ions has little effect on the monolayer structure, behaviour that is surprisingly different to that seen for phospholipids.</p>}},
  author       = {{Hazell, Gavin and Gee, Anthony P. and Arnold, Thomas and Edler, Karen J. and Lewis, Simon E.}},
  issn         = {{0021-9797}},
  keywords     = {{Air-water interface; Langmuir monolayers; Lipids; Reflectometry; Sulfobetaine}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{07}},
  pages        = {{190--198}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Journal of Colloid and Interface Science}},
  title        = {{Langmuir monolayers composed of single and double tail sulfobetaine lipids}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2016.04.020}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jcis.2016.04.020}},
  volume       = {{474}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}